The Official UK Top 20 Books 3.6.2011

Here’s the official UK Top 20 bestselling books for the week ending 28.5.2011, as compiled by The Bookseller:

 

1

Madeleine
Kate McCann

 

2

The Family
Martina Cole

 

3

The Confession
John Grisham

 

4

The Distant Hours
Kate Morton

 

5

At Home: A short history of private life
Bill Bryson

 

6

Port Mortuary (Kay Scarpetta Mysteries)
Patricia Cornwell

 

7

Dead Man’s Grip
Peter James

 

8

When God Was a Rabbit
Sarah Winman

 

9

Carte Blanche (James Bond)
Jeffery Deaver

 

10

To the Moon and Back: How far would you go for Love?
Jill Mansell

 

11

Our Kind of Traitor
John le Carré

 

12

Jump!
Jilly Cooper OBE

 

13

Bad Boy (Inspector Banks Mystery)
Peter Robinson

14

The Fry Chronicles
Stephen Fry

 

15

The Fort
Bernard Cornwell

 

16

The Red Queen
Philippa Gregory

 

17

The Finkler Question
Howard Jacobson

 

18

Fall of Giants
Ken Follett

 

19

The Passage
Justin Cronin

 

20

Water for Elephants: a Novel
Sara Gruen

 

The Burning Wire by Jeffery Deaver – Book Review

The Burning Wire
Jeffery Deaver

 

The Burning Wire is the 9th in Jeffery Deaver’s Lincoln Rhyme crime series featuring the quadriplegic detective and the resourceful Amelia Sachs. Somebody is manipulating the electricity grid of New York with deadly results, but unlike the CIA and the FBI, Lincoln Rhyme doesn’t believe it is the work of terrorists at all…

Jeffery Deaver has produced another compelling, fast-paced and creative thriller with a real twist in the tale.

 

To find out about other books in the charts, have a look at the UK’s top 20 bestselling books

 

If you like The Burning Wire you may also enjoy:

 

The Bone Collector
Jeffery Deaver

 

Sleepyhead (Tom Thorne Novels)
Mark Billingham

 

Tell No One
Harlan Coben

The Official UK Top 20 Books 4.5.2011

Here’s the official UK Top 20 bestselling books for the week ending 23.4.2011, as compiled by The Bookseller:

 

1

The Red Queen
Philippa Gregory

Read review…

2

The Burning Wire
Jeffery Deaver

Read review…

3

Stand by Me
Sheila O’Flanagan

4

The Cobra
Frederick Forsyth

5

9th Judgement (Womens Murder Club 9)
James Patterson

Read review…

6

One Day in May
Catherine Alliott

7

Goddess of Vengeance
Jackie Collins

8

Killing Hour
Andrew Gross

9

Meet Me at the Cupcake Cafe
Jenny Colgan

10

The Slap
Christos Tsiolkas

Read review…

11

Girl on the Run
Jane Costello

12

From the Dead
Mark Billingham

Read review…

13

Theodore Boone
John Grisham

Read review…

14

Room
Emma Donoghue

Read review…

15

Scorpia Rising (Alex Rider)
Anthony Horowitz

Read review…

16

The Hare With Amber Eyes: A Hidden Inheritance
Edmund de Waal

17

One Day
David Nicholls

Read review…

18

Solar
Ian McEwan

Read review…

19

Chances
Freya North

Read review…

20

Started Early, Took My Dog
Kate Atkinson

Read review…

The Red Queen by Philippa Gregory: Book Review

The Red Queen
Philippa Gregory

 

Philippa Gregory is a historian and author of over 20 historical novels, perhaps the most famous of which is the bestselling The Other Boleyn Girl. Her latest novel, The Red Queen, is the second book in her new trilogy, The Cousins War.

The Red Queen tells the story of Margaret Beaufort, child-bride of Edmund Tudor, who undermined the support for Richard III to ensure the succession of her only son, Henry Tudor, as King Henry VII of England. The events of The War of the Roses are related with Philippa Gregory’s customary passion for detail, incident, character and historical fact, and the self-righteous and ruthless Margaret makes an unusual and fascinating heroine. The Plantaganet family is brought vividly and convincingly to life.

 

To find out about other books in the charts, have a look at the UK’s top 20 bestselling books

 

If you like The Red Queen, you may also enjoy:

 

The White Queen (Cousins’ War Series 1)
Philippa Gregory

 

Lancaster And York: The Wars of the Roses
Alison Weir

 

The Confession of Katherine Howard
Suzannah Dunn

 

The People’s Queen
Vanora Bennett

The Official UK Top 20 Books 27.4.2011

Here’s the official UK Top 20 bestselling books for the week ending 16.4.2011, as compiled by The Bookseller:

 

1

9th Judgement (Womens Murder Club 9)
James Patterson

Read review…

2

The Red Queen
Philippa Gregory

3

Scorpia Rising (Alex Rider)
Anthony Horowitz

Read review…

4

Those in Peril
Wilbur Smith

Read review…

 

5

The Slap
Christos Tsiolkas

Read review…

6

From the Dead
Mark Billingham

Read review…

7

Stand by Me
Sheila O’Flanagan

8

The Cobra
Frederick Forsyth

9

Chances
Freya North

Read review…

10

Room
Emma Donoghue

Read review…

11

One Day
David Nicholls

Read review…

12

Goddess of Vengeance
Jackie Collins

13

Solar
Ian McEwan

Read review…

14

Theodore Boone
John Grisham

Read review…

15

Blueeyedboy
Joanne Harris

Read review…

16

One Day in May
Catherine Alliott

17

The Twilight Saga: The Official Illustrated Guide
Stephenie Meyer

18

The Burning Wire
Jeffery Deaver

 

19

Killing Hour
Andrew Gross

20

Started Early, Took My Dog
Kate Atkinson

Read review…

Susan Hill: Author Profile

Susan Hill

Susan Hill, born in 1942 and married to the Shakespeare scholar and author Stanley Wells, has written a wide variety of fiction and non-fiction – including I’m the King of the Castle, for which she received the Somerset Maugham Award, and The Woman in Black, which has been adapted as a stage play and running at the West End since 1989. With an ITV television series of her Simon Serrailler detective series in the making, however, her work is soon set to reach an even wider audience. Susan Hill has founded her own publishing company, Long Barn Books, which publishes one novel a year, and is a monthly columnist for The Daily Telegraph.

 

The Woman In Black
Susan Hill

 

This wonderfully crafted ghost story is short, simple and utterly terrifying. The uneasy atmosphere intensifies steadily throughout the book, from the family sitting around a fire and telling each other ghost stories to the windswept salt marshes that enclose Eel Marsh House. When young Arthur Kipps is summoned as a junior solicitor to the funeral of Mrs Alice Drablow, he finds himself irrevocably drawn into the tragic secrets of the house – and the intrigue surrounding a mysterious woman dressed all in black. Subtle and chilling, The Woman In Black is a story that will haunt you long after you switch off the light.

 

The Various Haunts Of Men (Simon Serrailler 1)
Susan Hill

 

Susan Hill turned her hand from literary to detective fiction for the first time with The Various Haunts Of Men. The result is the best of both genres; a beautifully-written, character-driven novel combined with a thrilling and suspenseful mystery. The detail of the writing evokes a rich and thoroughly believable community, making the characters all the more sympathetic and the storyline all the more engrossing. You’ll find yourself half way through before you even notice turning the pages, and the twist will leave you reeling…

 

The Man in the Picture: A Ghost Story
Susan Hill

 

A chilling, old-fashioned ghost story about a strange and beautiful painting of a Venetian street scene. When Theo, a Cambridge don, relates the curious history of the picture on his wall to his former student, Oliver, Oliver has no idea that the course of his future is now bound inevitably to that of the painting. Brimming with tension, The Man in the Picture tells the horrifying story of picture that has that has the power to influence the lives around it. Perfect to read by the fireside on a dark, solitary winter’s night.

 

Howards End is on the Landing: A year of reading from home
Susan Hill

 

When searching for her copy of Howard’s End, Susan Hill realises just how many of the books on her landing bookcase she has never actually read. She decides to embark on a literary journey for one year of her life, rediscovering the books that she already owns and acquiring no new books whatsoever.  It is a journey that reunites her with books she has loved all her life, that reawakens some fascinating past encounters with authors, and that leads her to books and authors she has never before read.  Howards End is on the Landing is a wonderful gift for booklovers of all ages.

Anthony Horowitz: Author Profile

Anthony Horowitz

Anthony Horowitz, born on 5th April 1956, is one of the UK’s most prolific authors – and is soon to become a household name with what promises to be the publishing event of the year.

For the very first time, the Conan Doyle estate has authorised a new Sherlock Holmes novel, and Anthony Horowitz’s The House of Silk will be published on 1.11.11.

 

House of Silk

 

Written by Dr Watson in a retirement home a year after the death of Sherlock Holmes, The House of Silk tells a tale that was, explains Watson, just too shocking and monstrous to reveal until now. “It is no exaggeration to say it could tear apart the very fabric of society”.

At a very healthy 85,000 words, The House of Silk will be published in a large hardback edition, and, following the success of the recent blockbuster film and the contemporary BBC series, seems set to become a publishing sensation.

It is already possible to preorder The House of Silk from Waterstone’s.

 

Anthony Horowitz’s previous works are many and varied. He is perhaps best known as a children’s author, and his action-adventure spy novels featuring the teenage Alex Rider have proved enormously successful in encouraging reluctant teenage boys to develop an interest in and a love of reading.

He has also written a number of short stories and adult novels, adapted many of Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot novels for the television, created and written the ITV series Foyle’s War, and written most of the early episodes of Midsomer Murders.

 

Alex Rider series

Stormbreaker

Point Blanc

Skeleton Key

Eagle Strike

Scorpia

Ark Angel 

Snakehead

Crocodile Tears

Scorpia Rising

The Diamond Brothers series

(humorous detective stories for 8-12 year olds)

 

The Power of Five series

(fantasy horror adventure novels for teenagers)

Coming soon: April/May 2011

Here are some of the biggest titles released over the next few months, available to pre-order now…

 

Toys
James Patterson

Published 28th April 2011
Hardcover

 

Carte Blanche (James Bond)
Jeffery Deaver

Published 26th May 2011
Hardcover

 

The Family
Martina Cole

Published 12th May 2011
Paperback

 

The Fifth Witness
Michael Connelly

Published 14th April 2011
Hardcover

 

The Red Queen
Philippa Gregory

Published 14th April 2011
Paperback

 

Dead Reckoning: A True Blood Novel
Charlaine Harris

Published 2rd May 2011
Hardcover

 

The Man in the White Suit: The Stig, Le Mans, The Fast Lane and Me
Ben Collins

Published 28th April 2011
Paperback

 

Notes from my Kitchen Table
Gwyneth Paltrow

Published 28th April 2011
Hardcover

 

Life: Keith Richards
Keith Richards

Published 26th May 2011
Paperback

 

The Saga of Larten Crepsley (2) – Ocean of Blood
Darren Shan

Published 18th April 2011
Hardcover

The Guardian Children’s Fiction Prize

The Guardian

 

The Guardian Children’s Fiction Prize has been awarded each year since 1967, and is judged exclusively by children’s authors. No author can win the prize more than once. Previous winners have included Ted Hughes, Philip Pullman, Jacqueline Wilson and Anne Fine. Each year’s winner is awarded £1,500.

The 2010 contenders were judged by Linda Buckley-Archer, Jenny Downham and the 2009 prizewinner, Mal Peet.

 

2010 winner:

Ghost Hunter: Chronicles of Ancient Darkness book 6
Michelle Paver

 

2010 shortlist:

Now
Morris Gleitzman

 

Unhooking the Moon
Gregory Hughes

 

The Ogre of Oglefort
Eva Ibbotson

 

2009 winner:

Exposure
Mal Peet

 

2008 winner:

The Knife of Never Letting Go (Chaos Walking)
Patrick Ness

 

2007 winner:

Finding Violet Park
Jenny Valentine

 

2006 winner:

A Darkling Plain (Mortal Engines Quartet)
Philip Reeve

 

2005 winner:

The New Policeman (New Policeman Trilogy)
Kate Thompson

Life and Laughing by Michael McIntyre: Book Review

 

 

Life and Laughing: My Story
Michael McIntyre

 

Since his big break at the Royal Variety Performance in 2006, Michael McIntyre has become Britain’s best-loved comedy star. Michael’s journey towards the fastest selling DVD of all time, hosting his own BBC1 series, and becoming a judge on Britain’s Got Talent, is chronicled in his first book – the bestselling autobiography Life and Laughing.

With his legendary humour, warmth, charm and honesty, Michael McIntyre shares his story from his showbiz roots, life at a single sex school, pursuing his wife Kitty, crippling debt and failing to sell more than one ticket at the Edinburgh Festival, right through to the staggering success of recent years. A fascinating, engrossing and very very funny read.

 

To find out about other books in the charts, have a look at the Official UK Top 20 Books

If you enjoy Life and Laughing, then why not try some more celebrity autobiographies?

 

The Fry Chronicles
Stephen Fry

 

Can’t Stand Up for Sitting Down
Jo Brand

 

Livin’ the Dreem: A Year in My Life
Harry Hill

 

Nerd Do Well
Simon Pegg